View allAll Photos Tagged KodakEKTACHROMEE100VS

Red funky shots will come back soon! This is from this summer in Ischia!

 

View On Black

Bronica EC-TL / Zenzanon M.C. 80/f2.4 / Kodak Ektachrome 100VS

日本、東京、台東区、鶯谷

2009/8/12

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Woca 120G, Kodak Ektachome 100VS (cross-processed)

A nice day at Greenlake brings out all the kids at the wading pool!

The first Sounders match of the year, celebrated - appropriately enough - with a glass of Cascadia cider.

Somewhere on I-5, looking at the map. . . .

If you stick a piece of paper like this on wet paint, you'd think it'd leave a nice big square once the paint drys....

 

Rolleiflex T

Kodak Ektachrome E100VS

From Portela do Homem to Pitões das Júnias

 

Gerês National Park

I did this shot years and years ago, but I wanted to try it again and compare the two,.

Point Mountain overlook in Hunterdon County, NJ. This is kind of a shitty photo, since I didn't have my GND with me that day. Ektachrome just couldn't handle it...

The nuts of a bridge, all rusty against the blue.

Watching you watching the fountain. . . .

Dear god - a thirty thousand dollar expenditure - THIRTY!

 

Well, it was more like 27-ish, but really what's another four thousand between friends?

 

Brand new, too. Never been touched by anyone but me! Yeah, I know I just lost 45% of the car's value driving it off the lot, but since I tend to drive my car until the wheels fall off, I don't have to worry about resale value at all.

That's the second biggest trophy I've ever seen. . . .

Papa's Toy's Car Show on May 11th, 2013.

 

Leica M6 TTL, Leica 50mm Summicron f/2, Kodak Ektachrome E100VS

It's a vaguely McDonald's Shamrock Shake. . . but BETTER!

This is the remains of the concrete snowshed that was build near Wellington after an avalanche clobbered nearly a hundred people (and a train) back in 1910.

Rolleiflex 2.8C / Schneider-Kreuznach 80/f2.8 / Kodak Ektrachrome E100VS

2007/05/03

Kanagawa-Ken, Kawasaki

While I am as straight as the day is long, (assuming it's summer and not winter solstice or something), I do enjoy going down to Gay Pride. It's got a good, happy energy about it, a parade that I can get behind - and of course great costumes!

The IT guys were at a loss on why my computer was not working.

The wall of the porn shop just up the street has the cool two-tone paint job. The Cigar shop right next door also has a cool contrasting paint job and I thought the three colors looked good together.

My New Years Resolution? Only one candy bar a day.

My co-workers are awesome. They're willing to murder each other on a whim!

The Giving Tree at Mud Bay Pet Store was covered in tags for poor homeless dogs and cats who had to spend Christmas without families.

 

While I can't save them all, I could at least make Brighton the Cat's holiday a little more happy with some toys and special kibbles.

yesterday, kodak announced the discontinuation of all ektachrome slide film. end of an era.

 

mamiya 6MF 75mm f/3.5 + cross-processed kodak ektachrome E100VS. lab: A&I color, hollywood, ca. scan: epson V750. exif tags: filmtagger.

I liked the way the traces of the other leaves on the ground looked

Seattle

Washington, USA

 

View from Kerry Park

 

Canon EOS Elan II

EF 70-200mm f/4L

Kodak Ektachrome E100VS

Ducks down at MOHI as the sun goes down.

Just a little bit of cleaning left to do. . . .

And Seattle's skies get just a bit grayer as JP Patches passed away on Sunday. If you grew up in the golden age of television, as late a the mid eighties, odds are you had someone like this in your life - someone like Howdy Doody, or Bozo the Clown or Captain Kangaroo would be the closest analog, at least on a national level - but JP was different. He interacted with his audience. He'd regularly gave shout outs over the ICU2 Television, you could actually meet him at Seafair along with the pirates, and his work with Seattle’s Children’s Hospital was legendary - and he did it for something like 30 years in the Pacific Northwest.

 

But he was more than that. He was. . . special.

 

It was towards end of the nineties some 15 years after JP left the airwaves, a Soundgarden concert was playing in Key Arena. The opening act had just finished up, and the audience was getting a bit too rowdy - when JP swooped in like a greased painted patriarch - and the crowd instantly settled down like good little Patches Pals. Such was the power of the clown. Even now, with his show off the air longer than it was on, JP was still doing birthdays and appearances and holding court to massive crowds.

 

Fifty years from now the term "Patches Pal" won't have much meaning - and we'll all be the worse for it. But for now, it still means something. If you're a Patches Pal (or heavens forbid, - a Boris Buddy) it means you're from there. It's the Puget Sound litmus test for Northwest natives. It's a label for those who remember Seattle before grunge, Starbucks and the dot.com crash.

 

Patches Pals can tell you what it was like to drive from Lynnwood to downtown Seattle in twenty minutes. At rush hour. Patches Pals remember the box the Space Needle came in, and how it ruined the skyline. They remember Dags, Whitefront, and Hansen's Sunbeam Bread. They remember when the Miss Budweiser wasn't forced to race with one propeller tied behind its back, and the contests between her and the Miss Pay 'n Pak were so close a boat owner on the log-boom might not even notice if he ran out of beer. Being a Patches Pal means you grew up with a role model who never once held out for a contract extension or threatened to move to another city.

 

Being a Patches Pal is a badge of honor that no one gave to you but yourself.

 

All alone on the beach. . . .

So I forced myself to wake up early for this shot. I set up my tripod in the middle of the street and a guy in a motorcycle asks me if I'm shooting for the local TV station.

 

* Holga 120 GCFN, on Kodak Ektachrome E100VS (xpro)

My new Revoltech Lupin III figure in close-up. These things are awesome - loads of articulation and accessories. Really nice bits of work - sadly no Goemon, Fujiko or Zenigata yet . . .

And here we have the run-up to the Day of the Doctor in picture form.

any idea why the result is like this?

Camera: Lomography Belair X 6-12, Belairgon 90mm. Film: KodakEktachrome E100VS, home-developed with the Tetenal Colortec E-6 3-bath kit.

And once again, the world becomes obsessed with a sport that 2/3rds of America couldn't care any less about if they tried: THE WORLD CUP!

Freaky Anchor Sculpture, I guess!

--

Bristol International Balloon Fiesta, 2011

* blog post

* flickr set

Douro River near Foz Côa

The hair transplant is working for the Bald Eagles at the zoo.

Went and shot some native Americans doing dancey-stuff at their pow-wow. I loved the traditional Indian gear and the ray-bans.

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